Autumn in Wānaka: New Zealand’s best-kept secret

The poplar trees that line the fence rows and creek beds of the Wānaka basin were planted for practical reasons: erosion control, shelter, farm boundaries. Yet every April, they turn a shade of gold that stops visitors in their tracks, provides a sense of familiar knowing for locals and draws photographers and selfie takers alike. If you have visited New Zealand’s South Island in summer or come for the winter ski season, you already know this part of the world is exceptional. But there is a strong argument that the travellers who time their visit for mid-March through May are seeing it at its finest, and keeping rather quiet about it.

Views across Lake Wanaka in autumn

Autumn is, by some margin, the most underrated season in the Southern Lakes.

Autumn gold

Unlike the autumn displays of New England or the maples of Kyoto, poplar gold runs in long vertical strokes

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